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The “TRAUMA LIFE” initiative: The impact of a multidisciplinary checklist process on outcomes and communication in a Trauma Intensive Care Unit

Checklists have been advocated to improve quality outcomes/communication in the critical care setting, but results have been mixed. A new checklist process, “TRAUMA LIFE”, was implemented in our Trauma Intensive Care Unit (TICU) to replace prior checklists. The purpose of this study was to evaluate...

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Published in:The American journal of surgery 2018-06, Vol.215 (6), p.1024-1028
Main Authors: Joseph, Kimberly, Gupta, Sameer, Yon, James, Partida, Renee, Cartagena, Lee, Kubasiak, John, Buie, Vanessa, Miller, Jared, Wiley, Dorion, Nagy, Kimberly, Starr, Frederic, Dennis, Andrew, Kaminsky, Matthew, Bokhari, Faran
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c393t-29a247c7b7dc66f4b5bcada6910e5b6adad905d9ca2e0f46fcbdbf30fd15afe43
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creator Joseph, Kimberly
Gupta, Sameer
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Starr, Frederic
Dennis, Andrew
Kaminsky, Matthew
Bokhari, Faran
description Checklists have been advocated to improve quality outcomes/communication in the critical care setting, but results have been mixed. A new checklist process, “TRAUMA LIFE”, was implemented in our Trauma Intensive Care Unit (TICU) to replace prior checklists. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of the “TRAUMA LIFE” process implementation on quality metrics and on patient/family communication in the TICU. “TRAUMA LIFE” was considered maturely implemented by 2016. Multiple quality metrics, including restraint order compliance, were compared between 2013 and 2016 (pre- and post-implementation). Compliance with the “Family Message” (FM), a part of the “TRAUMA LIFE” communication process, was analyzed in 2016. Improvement was seen in CAUTI, VAE, and IUCU; CLABSI rates increased. Restraint order compliance increased significantly. FM delivery compliance was inconsistent; improvement was noted in concordance between update content and FM documented in Electronic Medical Record. Implementation of “TRAUMA LIFE” was well integrated into the rounding process and was associated with some improvement in quality metrics and communication. Additional evaluation is required to assess sustainability. •A concise, easy to remember checklist (“TRAUMA LIFE”) is used to assist in ICU rounding.•Checklist use was associated with a reduction in key ICU quality metrics including CAUTI, VAE, and restraint compliance.•Concordance between the proposed and delivered daily “Family Message” improved over the study period.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.amjsurg.2018.03.012
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subjects Catheters
Censuses
Check lists
Checklist - methods
Checklists
Collaboration
Communication
Compliance
Critical Care - standards
Data collection
Disease control
Family Message
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
ICU
Intensive care
Intensive Care Units - organization & administration
Medical electronics
Medical records
Patients
Polls & surveys
Pressure ulcers
Quality
Quality Improvement
Quality metrics
Retrospective Studies
Rounding
Surveillance
Sustainability
Thromboembolism
Trauma
Urinary tract diseases
Urinary tract infections
Urogenital system
Ventilators
title The “TRAUMA LIFE” initiative: The impact of a multidisciplinary checklist process on outcomes and communication in a Trauma Intensive Care Unit
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